The Klamath Indians of Southern Oregon
Cascades compiled from
the works of WINTHROP ASSOCIATES CULTURAL
RESEARCH
Introduction
Adaptations
Social Organization
Ritual
Myth
Post-Contact Life
Crater Lake
|
Adaptations

Collection of reeds |
As the archaeological record demonstrates (see Chapter 8), by several
thousand years ago the people of the Klamath Basin had developed an
efficient and fairly specialized adaptation, emphasizing fish and the
marsh-growing wokas, with a secondary dependence on a wide range of
roots, seeds, fruit, and shellfish. Animals were commonly hunted with
bow and-arrow, though nooses (for deer) and nets (for water birds) were
also employed (Barrett 1907:246-47). Traditionally, hunting was not a
cultural emphasis; in Leslie Spier's phrase, "deer rind other game are
only of minor importance" (Spier 1930:145). Nonetheless, it had a
significant place in the total subsistence round: Spier (1930:156-57)
listed over forty species of mammals and birds in the Klamath diet.
As was characteristic throughout the region, the Klamath subsistence
quest involved shifting residence patterns, from quasi-permanent
villages near ice-free streams or springs during the winter, to a series
of fishing, gathering, and hunting sites through the spring, summer, and
fall. Winter dwellings consisted of circular, semi-subterranean earth
lodges, roofed with mats, grass, and dirt over a pole frame. Summer
dwellings were more ephemeral, being covered with mats (Spier
1930:197-205). The changing seasons and availability of resources
largely determined this cycle:
The fixed villages are the winter residences to which people return
year after year. Each spring finds them leaving for favorable fishing
stations where there are successive fish runs. Through the summer they
move to the prairies to gather edible roots and berries or to the
mountain and desert to hunt. During most of this time families are
widely scattered and the winter villages quite deserted, but with the
ripening of pond lily seeds in the marshes during August and September
they again congregate. (Spier 1930:10)
As can be seen from Table 3 - 1, fishing was a nearly constant
activity, though particularly rich during the spring Wokas provided the
plant staple, and its harvest formed a key element of the activity of
late summer and fall.
The Klamath Seasonal Round
| March | move to fishing camps, old remain at winter villages |
| April | fishing, continues in varying intensity year round |
| May | fishing, women dig for ipos, waterfowl eggs gathered, yellow pine cambium sought |
| June | camas gathered in meadows, waterfowl and other small game hunted |
| July | same |
| August | women harvest pond lily seeds (wokas) on lakes, men hunt mule deer and antelopes |
| September | harvest wokas, gather berries in uplands, hunt, fish, return to winter villages |
| October | prepare winter provisions, hunting and fishing restricted |
| November | some hunting and fishing |
| December | some fishing, some hunting of deer, bear and waterfowl, shamanic ceremonies |
| January | some hunting and fishing where possible |
| February | same, provisions often low, in times of famine moss and lodgepole pine cambium eaten |
The Klamath caught a variety of fish. Runs of suckers (Catostomidae)
and salmon (Oncorhynchus) were particularly important. Fish were
available on the Williamson River year-round, hence it supported many
settlements, while many other streams had fish runs only in the spring.
Fish were generally netted, both at dams constructed in the rivers, and
on the lakes, using dugout canoes or tule rafts The Klamath had a
sophisticated fishing technology, employing a variety of nets, including
triangular dip nets and smaller gill nets (Barrett 1907:247-51; Spier
1930:147-55; Stem n.d.:1S-18).
Harvesting wokas, the seeds of the pond lily (Nuphar polysepala),
was a specialized (and crucial) Klamath adaptation. Klamath Marsh is
estimated to have contained ten thousand acres of the plant. The seeds
were gathered from canoe in the late summer, chiefly by women. The pods
were prepared through a series of processes, depending on the maturity
of the plant, including fermenting, parching, and grinding. Wokas was
roasted and eaten dry, or ground and prepared as porridge or bread. The
stored seeds were eaten throughout the year. Coville provided a detailed
analysis of the preparation of wokas (See Coville 1904; Spier
1930:160ff; Lang 1988a.)
The Klamath gathered a wide variety of other seeds and roots,
including camas (Camassia quamash) and ipos (or epos, Perideridia
oregana) (see Coville 1897; Lang 1988a). The search for berries in the
late summer brought gathering parties to the uplands, including slopes
in the vicinity of Crater Lake:
Late summer and autumn, seeds, berries, and nuts are gathered, the
Indians congregating where these are plentiful. Many of those at
Klamath marsh, for example, move directly to Huckleberry mountain,
southwest of Crater lake, to garner these berries. (Spier 1930:146)
In summary, the Klamath utilized a wide range of animal and plant
resources This is suggested by the number of animal and plant terms in
the Klamath lexicon. To provide some rough approximation of Klamath
animal and plant knowledge, Klamath botanical and zoological terms were
compiled from Gatschet's Klamath Dictionary (1890), Spier's Klamath
Ethnography (1930), and Barker's Klamath Texts (1963a). In all, 248
animal and 143 plant terms were included. The Klamath animal terms
include (in order from most to least numerous) birds, mammals, fish,
insects, reptiles, shellfish, and amphibians. Plant categories (again in
order of number of entries) include grasses, fruits, trees, roots, other
plants, and seeds (see Table 3 - 2). (1)
Klamath Animal Terms
| Rank | Category | Number of Terms | Proportion |
| 1 | Birds (incl. eggs) | 100 | 40% |
| 2 | Mammals | 58 | 23% |
| 3 | Fish | 39 | 16% |
| 4 | Insects | 32 | 13% |
| 5 | Reptiles | 11 | 4% |
| 6 | Shellfish | 4 | 2% |
| 6 | Amphibians | 4 | 2% |
Total Animal Terms Listed = 248
Klamath Plant Terms
| Rank | Category | Number of Terms | Proportion |
| 1 | Grass/Tule | 36 | 26% |
| 2 | Fruits | 35 | 25% |
| 3 | Trees | 21 | 15% |
| 4 | Roots | 19 | 13% |
| 5 | Other Plants | 18 | 13% |
| 6 | Seeds | 12 | 8% |
Total Plant Terms Listed = 143
1 This list was compiled by DR
Deny Hewlett, as part of a study of prehistoric settlement and
adaptation on the Winema National Forest. (sec R. Winthrop et al.
1989)
Introduction | Adaptations | Social
Organization | Ritual Myth | Post-Settlement
Life | Crater Lake
|